Word: short-term
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...plan to identify borrowers in trouble and modify their loans has been more successful. As of October, the Hope Now Alliance says it has helped 2.3 million borrowers stay in their homes. But only a third of those homeowners actually got loan modifications. The rest got some kind of short-term fix from their lender, such as forgoing a missed payment or giving a few months' reprieve in making payments - and consumer advocates warn that such measures will land those borrowers back in trouble when their regular mortgage terms resume. What's more, the Center for Responsible Lending estimates that...
...Hong Kong, the financial and managerial nerve center of the Chinese region often called the world's factory, is a wealthy city. But even here, the global credit squeeze is making it tougher for businesses to borrow money to cover their short-term needs. "Right now, we're facing trouble," says Tommy Lam, owner of a garment factory in Dongguan, a Chinese manufacturing hub near Hong Kong. "We're not getting repeat orders we're supposed to get. [And] banks are warning us they may cut our credit in the future...
...those are only short-term fixes. For export-oriented Asian economies, the specter of a protracted U.S. recession remains daunting. Tommy Lam, owner of a garment factory in Dongguan, a Chinese city near Hong Kong, says that he has already seen a reduction in demand. "We're not getting the repeat orders we're supposed to get," Lam says...
...Despite interest-rate cuts last week in the U.S., Europe and Asia, businesses throughout the world are finding it nearly impossible to borrow and money-market rates remain abnormally high. In Hong Kong, for example, the one-month interbank offered rate, the benchmark for short-term bank lending, rose to 5% last week even as the city cut its policy rate from 3.5% to 2.5%. Banks remain leery of lending in the face of further financial-industry failures...
...help. Pensioners who invested in Lehman mini-bonds have staged a series of protests during the last three weeks. And on Sunday, a group of business owners, organized by Hong Kong's pro-business Liberal Party, appealed to the government to increase loans for small businesses to cover short-term operational costs. "In Korea, Japan, even Singapore, they have lots of support from the government if you're running a new business. They'll back you up," says Lau of the small-business association. "In Hong Kong, no way. If you open a new business, there's nobody looking after...